Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) (451 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated)
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Well, I was committed now; Tiapolo had to be smashed up before next day, and my hands were pretty full, not only with preparations, but with argument.  My house was like a mechanics’ debating society: Uma was so made up that I shouldn’t go into the bush by night, or that, if I did, I was never to come back again.  You know her style of arguing: you’ve had a specimen about Queen Victoria and the devil; and I leave you to fancy if I was tired of it before dark.

At last I had a good idea.  What was the use of casting my pearls before her?  I thought; some of her own chopped hay would be likelier to do the business.

“I’ll tell you what, then,” said I.  “You fish out your Bible, and I’ll take that up along with me.  That’ll make me right.”

She swore a Bible was no use.

“That’s just your Kanaka ignorance,” said I.  “Bring the Bible out.”

She brought it, and I turned to the title-page, where I thought there would likely be some English, and so there was.  “There!” said I.  “Look at that!  ‘
London
:
Printed for the British and Foreign Bible Society
,
Blackfriars
,’ and the date, which I can’t read, owing to its being in these X’s.  There’s no devil in hell can look near the Bible Society, Blackfriars.  Why, you silly!”  I said, “how do you suppose we get along with our own
aitus
at home?  All Bible Society!”

“I think you no got any,” said she.  “White man, he tell me you no got.”

“Sounds likely, don’t it?” I asked.  “Why would these islands all be chock full of them and none in Europe?”

“Well, you no got breadfruit,” said she.

I could have torn my hair.  “Now look here, old lady,” said I, “you dry up, for I’m tired of you.  I’ll take the Bible, which’ll put me as straight as the mail, and that’s the last word I’ve got to say.”

The night fell extraordinary dark, clouds coming up with sundown and overspreading all; not a star showed; there was only an end of a moon, and that not due before the small hours.  Round the village, what with the lights and the fires in the open houses, and the torches of many fishers moving on the reef, it kept as gay as an illumination; but the sea and the mountains and woods were all clean gone.  I suppose it might be eight o’clock when I took the road, laden like a donkey.  First there was that Bible, a book as big as your head, which I had let myself in for by my own tomfoolery.  Then there was my gun, and knife, and lantern, and patent matches, all necessary.  And then there was the real plant of the affair in hand, a mortal weight of gunpowder, a pair of dynamite fishing-bombs, and two or three pieces of slow match that I had hauled out of the tin cases and spliced together the best way I could; for the match was only trade stuff, and a man would be crazy that trusted it.  Altogether, you see, I had the materials of a pretty good blow-up!  Expense was nothing to me; I wanted that thing done right.

As long as I was in the open, and had the lamp in my house to steer by, I did well.  But when I got to the path, it fell so dark I could make no headway, walking into trees and swearing there, like a man looking for the matches in his bed-room.  I knew it was risky to light up, for my lantern would be visible all the way to the point of the cape, and as no one went there after dark, it would be talked about, and come to Case’s ears.  But what was I to do?  I had either to give the business over and lose caste with Maea, or light up, take my chance, and get through the thing the smartest I was able.

As long as I was on the path I walked hard, but when I came to the black beach I had to run.  For the tide was now nearly flowed; and to get through with my powder dry between the surf and the steep hill, took all the quickness I possessed.  As it was, even, the wash caught me to the knees, and I came near falling on a stone.  All this time the hurry I was in, and the free air and smell of the sea, kept my spirits lively; but when I was once in the bush and began to climb the path I took it easier.  The fearsomeness of the wood had been a good bit rubbed off for me by Master Case’s banjo-strings and graven images, yet I thought it was a dreary walk, and guessed, when the disciples went up there, they must be badly scared.  The light of the lantern, striking among all these trunks and forked branches and twisted rope-ends of lianas, made the whole place, or all that you could see of it, a kind of a puzzle of turning shadows.  They came to meet you, solid and quick like giants, and then span off and vanished; they hove up over your head like clubs, and flew away into the night like birds.  The floor of the bush glimmered with dead wood, the way the match-box used to shine after you had struck a lucifer.  Big, cold drops fell on me from the branches overhead like sweat.  There was no wind to mention; only a little icy breath of a land-breeze that stirred nothing; and the harps were silent.

The first landfall I made was when I got through the bush of wild cocoanuts, and came in view of the bogies on the wall.  Mighty queer they looked by the shining of the lantern, with their painted faces and shell eyes, and their clothes and their hair hanging.  One after another I pulled them all up and piled them in a bundle on the cellar roof, so as they might go to glory with the rest.  Then I chose a place behind one of the big stones at the entrance, buried my powder and the two shells, and arranged my match along the passage.  And then I had a look at the smoking head, just for good-bye.  It was doing fine.

“Cheer up,” says I.  “You’re booked.”

It was my first idea to light up and be getting homeward; for the darkness and the glimmer of the dead wood and the shadows of the lantern made me lonely.  But I knew where one of the harps hung; it seemed a pity it shouldn’t go with the rest; and at the same time I couldn’t help letting on to myself that I was mortal tired of my employment, and would like best to be at home and have the door shut.  I stepped out of the cellar and argued it fore and back.  There was a sound of the sea far down below me on the coast; nearer hand not a leaf stirred; I might have been the only living creature this side of Cape Horn.  Well, as I stood there thinking, it seemed the bush woke and became full of little noises.  Little noises they were, and nothing to hurt — a bit of a crackle, a bit of a rush — but the breath jumped right out of me and my throat went as dry as a biscuit.  It wasn’t Case I was afraid of, which would have been common-sense; I never thought of Case; what took me, as sharp as the colic, was the old wives’ tales, the devil-women and the man-pigs.  It was the toss of a penny whether I should run: but I got a purchase on myself, and stepped out, and held up the lantern (like a fool) and looked all round.

In the direction of the village and the path there was nothing to be seen; but when I turned inland it’s a wonder to me I didn’t drop.  There, coming right up out of the desert and the bad bush — there, sure enough, was a devil-woman, just as the way I had figured she would look.  I saw the light shine on her bare arms and her bright eyes, and there went out of me a yell so big that I thought it was my death.

“Ah!  No sing out!” says the devil-woman, in a kind of a high whisper.  “Why you talk big voice?  Put out light!  Ese he come.”

“My God Almighty, Uma, is that you?” says I.


Ioe
,”  says she.  “I come quick.  Ese here soon.”

“You come alone?” I asked.  “You no ‘fraid?”

“Ah, too much ‘fraid!” she whispered, clutching me.  “I think die.”

“Well,” says I, with a kind of a weak grin, “I’m not the one to laugh at you, Mrs. Wiltshire, for I’m about the worst scared man in the South Pacific myself.”

She told me in two words what brought her.  I was scarce gone, it seems, when Fa’avao came in, and the old woman had met Black Jack running as hard as he was fit from our house to Case’s.  Uma neither spoke nor stopped, but lit right out to come and warn me.  She was so close at my heels that the lantern was her guide across the beach, and afterwards, by the glimmer of it in the trees, she got her line up hill.  It was only when I had got to the top or was in the cellar that she wandered Lord knows where! and lost a sight of precious time, afraid to call out lest Case was at the heels of her, and falling in the bush, so that she was all knocked and bruised.  That must have been when she got too far to the southward, and how she came to take me in the flank at last and frighten me beyond what I’ve got the words to tell of.

Well, anything was better than a devil-woman, but I thought her yarn serious enough.  Black Jack had no call to be about my house, unless he was set there to watch; and it looked to me as if my tomfool word about the paint, and perhaps some chatter of Maea’s, had got us all in a clove hitch.  One thing was clear: Uma and I were here for the night; we daren’t try to go home before day, and even then it would be safer to strike round up the mountain and come in by the back of the village, or we might walk into an ambuscade.  It was plain, too, that the mine should be sprung immediately, or Case might be in time to stop it.

I marched into the tunnel, Uma keeping tight hold of me, opened my lantern and lit the match.  The first length of it burned like a spill of paper, and I stood stupid, watching it burn, and thinking we were going aloft with Tiapolo, which was none of my views.  The second took to a better rate, though faster than I cared about; and at that I got my wits again, hauled Uma clear of the passage, blew out and dropped the lantern, and the pair of us groped our way into the bush until I thought it might be safe, and lay down together by a tree.

“Old lady,” I said, “I won’t forget this night.  You’re a trump, and that’s what’s wrong with you.”

She humped herself close up to me.  She had run out the way she was, with nothing on her but her kilt; and she was all wet with the dews and the sea on the black beach, and shook straight on with cold and the terror of the dark and the devils.

“Too much ‘fraid,” was all she said.

The far side of Case’s hill goes down near as steep as a precipice into the next valley.  We were on the very edge of it, and I could see the dead wood shine and hear the sea sound far below.  I didn’t care about the position, which left me no retreat, but I was afraid to change.  Then I saw I had made a worse mistake about the lantern, which I should have left lighted, so that I could have had a crack at Case when he stepped into the shine of it.  And even if I hadn’t had the wit to do that, it seemed a senseless thing to leave the good lantern to blow up with the graven images.  The thing belonged to me, after all, and was worth money, and might come in handy.  If I could have trusted the match, I might have run in still and rescued it.  But who was going to trust the match?  You know what trade is.  The stuff was good enough for Kanakas to go fishing with, where they’ve got to look lively anyway, and the most they risk is only to have their hand blown off.  But for anyone that wanted to fool around a blow-up like mine that match was rubbish.

Altogether the best I could do was to lie still, see my shot-gun handy, and wait for the explosion.  But it was a solemn kind of a business.  The blackness of the night was like solid; the only thing you could see was the nasty bogy glimmer of the dead wood, and that showed you nothing but itself; and as for sounds, I stretched my ears till I thought I could have heard the match burn in the tunnel, and that bush was as silent as a coffin.  Now and then there was a bit of a crack; but whether it was near or far, whether it was Case stubbing his toes within a few yards of me, or a tree breaking miles away, I knew no more than the babe unborn.

And then, all of a sudden, Vesuvius went off.  It was a long time coming; but when it came (though I say it that shouldn’t) no man could ask to see a better.  At first it was just a son of a gun of a row, and a spout of fire, and the wood lighted up so that you could see to read.  And then the trouble began.  Uma and I were half buried under a wagonful of earth, and glad it was no worse, for one of the rocks at the entrance of the tunnel was fired clean into the air, fell within a couple of fathoms of where we lay, and bounded over the edge of the hill, and went pounding down into the next valley.  I saw I had rather undercalculated our distance, or over-done the dynamite and powder, which you please.

And presently I saw I had made another slip.  The noise of the thing began to die off, shaking the island; the dazzle was over; and yet the night didn’t come back the way I expected.  For the whole wood was scattered with red coals and brands from the explosion; they were all round me on the flat; some had fallen below in the valley, and some stuck and flared in the tree-tops.  I had no fear of fire, for these forests are too wet to kindle.  But the trouble was that the place was all lit up-not very bright, but good enough to get a shot by; and the way the coals were scattered, it was just as likely Case might have the advantage as myself.  I looked all round for his white face, you may be sure; but there was not a sign of him.  As for Uma, the life seemed to have been knocked right out of her by the bang and blaze of it.

There was one bad point in my game.  One of the blessed graven images had come down all afire, hair and clothes and body, not four yards away from me.  I cast a mighty noticing glance all round; there was still no Case, and I made up my mind I must get rid of that burning stick before he came, or I should be shot there like a dog.

It was my first idea to have crawled, and then I thought speed was the main thing, and stood half up to make a rush.  The same moment from somewhere between me and the sea there came a flash and a report, and a rifle bullet screeched in my ear.  I swung straight round and up with my gun, but the brute had a Winchester, and before I could as much as see him his second shot knocked me over like a nine-pin.  I seemed to fly in the air, then came down by the run and lay half a minute, silly; and then I found my hands empty, and my gun had flown over my head as I fell.  It makes a man mighty wide awake to be in the kind of box that I was in.  I scarcely knew where I was hurt, or whether I was hurt or not, but turned right over on my face to crawl after my weapon.  Unless you have tried to get about with a smashed leg you don’t know what pain is, and I let out a howl like a bullock’s.

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